Twenty-eight comments

Hornpipe/Reel

This is one of those tunes like "The De’il Amang the Tailors" which gets played as a reel in Scotland and England, and a hornpipe in Ireland. I guess that since hornpipes were originally unswung, that style would be how it was originally played.

Trevor, I don’t mean to be rude or ungrateful (though I will be blunt), but I’m starting to seriously question the value of posting tunes from this New England sourcebook you cite. Staten Island Hornpipe is a widely known session tune, but this setting doesn’t do it justice, at least not in the context of Irish dance music. If someone were to learn it from the setting you give here, they’d be hard pressed to pass it off at most sessions I’ve been too—it would mark them as unfamiliar with the Irish tradition. And it’s not just a matter of simplifying the life out of it, because to my ear the Irish trad structure has been stripped out of this version as well.

Given that Jeremy started this site to concentrate on the dance music of Ireland, I for one would prefer to see settings from more credible source materials—preferably trad players themselves. While there&#8217;s nothing stopping me from posting what I think is a &#8220;better&#8221; version, the fact is that the first setting posted is the one that shows up as sheet music and a sound file, so it becomes the de facto official www.thesession.org setting. In my mind, that begs us to be selective about the tunes we post&#8212;they ought to be playable, session-ready settings. Variations, idiosyncratic settings, simplifications, highly embellished versions, and historically or geographically interesting settings are all well and good, but better off in the comments section, as addenda to the main setting. Ideally, I think, the main setting here should be recognizably close to what&#8217;s commonly played at sessions by musicians familiar with the tradition. Of course, this is just my opinion, and perhaps a minority one. But I&#8217;m concerned about the quality of the tune archives we&#8217;re building here as a tool for people hoping to learn tunes for sessions (hence the site&#8217;s name, eh?).

As an example, I’ll post here a version of Staten Island I learned off a session-wise uillean piper. If I were to post Staten Island, it would look more like this, perhaps with some of the triplets left out (but included as variations in the comments section).

Ooops…sorry about all the word processing garbage (honest, I’m not cussing at anyone :o). And I didn’t mean to sound as harsh as it came out…I have nothing against Trevor or anyone posting their tunes here. Was just hoping out loud that we could be careful and selective, even asking others for more developed and "streetwise" settings of tunes.

To me, posting a tune straight out of a book without first making it your own by playing it on your instrument for a good long spell is akin to playing the same tune straight from the book at your local session. In most circles, you’d be booted out the door. I don’t want to boot anyone out the door, but I’d like to see more discretion in how tunes are posted here.

Now a discussion in a thread near you…

This seems to be going off the topic of Staten Island, so I’ve started a Discussion called "The Real Tune?" In the interests of keeping this chat to Staten Island, let’s continue there.

Meanwhile, Will, there’s a problem with your second ending for the A section; it’s missing a 3 before the efg. Also there’s a
problem in the ending for the B section; I don’t think the final AF should be there. This isn’t an aesthetic thing; it’s just to round it off.

Yep, Michael, I missed the 3 for that efg triplet. As for the AF at the end of the B part, I’m following one standard way of doing music notation, where the pick up notes are given both in an anacrusis *before* the repeat symbol at the start of each part, and to fill out the internal timing of each last bar. Sure, there are other ways to show this, but my way works as well, including in the music transcription software I use. It’s just habit now, a convention I’m accustomed to. Sorry if it throws you off.

New England Swings like a pendulum do - meaning without the ‘skip’

Old time New England, playing ‘hornpipes’ for contras and quadrilles, this would be played straight, no ‘skips’, and at a leisurely 120 beats a minute, ‘approximately’, to avoid that stinky old bowser ‘dogma’…

Staten Island Ferry - origin of title - tune?

Recently, someone told me this is an Irish tune and that there is a Staten Island in Ireland. I had always assumed it was an American tune named after the American Staten Island ferry. I didn’t think there was a Staten Island in Ireland, but because I really don’t know everything I was reluctant to accuse my informant of BS-ing me.

I went to Irish sessions in Chicago for years and never heard the tune played, but heard it played in performance by a band that did both Irish and American music, so just assumed it was one of those American tunes that had it’s roots in the British Isles or Ireland.

So I thought I’d check on the Good Old Session site to see if anybody else has discussed this. Does anybody know if this can really be considered an Irish tune?

I’ve never played Staten Island with you!!! Or De’il among the tailors!! I nicked this nice little set off a kiddy at my school who went to a scottish fiddling summer school in the outer hebrides. So there, Mr DJF. Maybe it’s just a good set.

I remember you playing Mrs McLeod’s but not the first two. How funny…we must play this set next time I see you!
(saw Lucas yesterday, ran away from a school trip in London to meet him at the Angel, haha)

Discussion: Submitting Tunes to the Session.org

Staten island

Jimmy Shand (of White Heather Club fame) recorded an eightsome reel set consisting of the The de’il amang the taylors, Staten Island, Speed the plough, The wind shakes the barley in that order. It would have been recorded about 1958 and became the best known eightsome reel set that would have been played by most schools for the next 20 years. This probably explains the popularity of the tune in Scotland and its connection with De’il amang the taylors.